Hi my brothers and sisters I had in mind to create this due to my past experiences since being on social media over the past 2 years.I have experienced the sweetness of creating friendships online yet I have also experienced the pain of friendships dying too.There seems to be a stronghold of rejection going on where people get hurt,tricked by cheap words of acceptance which may not happen in the same way in real life.Yet we all have different experiences.Some people manage to create nice interactions online and others really struggle.So that are your views of online friendships?.They do have risks like someone withdrawing themselves and not responding to you after you had built up a rapport with then,mis understandings in messages as things like tone ect are missing from typed comments.Yet they do have positives too..sometimes online personalities may shine more and even be even more attractive because they interact in a particular way.May people use emojis or avatars instead of ther real pics..would it ruin your pre built up perception of them having built up a great rapport online to actually see what the look like in a photo...or in real life..??.Do you find it easier to make online connections more than real life..??This forum is all online..so what have your experiences been in terms of making actual friends?..
Hi Encouragement,
Thanks for the very thoughtful thread.
I feel like I need to apologize to long-term members here, as I tell this story often. I grew up writing to pen pals. When I was about 15, a girl I had been writing for a long time came from across the country to visit; in my early 20's, a girl I had been writing to from Japan came to visit with her best friend. What amazes me most when I look back is that we were able to somehow set up these meetings without Googling each other's background information, and we had each other's real names and addresses from the very first letters. The visit from my Japanese pen pal was arranged entirely through paper letters that took 2-3 weeks to get to their destination each way, without a single phone call. This was long before the internet, so there was no instantaneous chatting, video communication, or social profiles. All we had to go on were paper letters, photos, and a sense of trust.
I have been wanting to get back into the snail mail pen pal community, but it has changed so much. Back then, no one thought twice about giving out their real name and address as they wrote and connected with others. Now days, you're advised to have a post office box (which can get pricey,) then are expected to turn the envelope into a work of art (because everyone wants to show off their mail on Instagram,) and because of this, you always run the risk of someone showing off your name and/or address to the world as they post everything about their lives online. Holy Toledo. I'm actually wondering if it's even worth the risk anymore.
But because I have been making connections through writing all my life, I'm also very comfortable seeing it as just another medium for meeting people that has the same ups and downs of real-life friendships. Ghosting is always hard either way, whether it's you or the other person who backs away, but people in real life disappear on each other all time, too.
For several years, God has actually sustained my sense of social connection solely through internet and long-distance connections. I went through a time where for some reason, He kept me from making any friends in real life, even though I was trying my best. I remember asking one lady at church I'd been talking to a bit if she wanted to go grab lunch, and she suddenly went from being extremely friendly to looking like I must have planted a bomb in her car. (Maybe I just look like a shady character.)
It's actually worked out well because when certain changes came in my life, my online friendships carried on without even a slight hiccup. And when the lockdowns hit for the pandemic hit, it was as if someone was telling me just to live the way I'd already been living for the past umpteen years. But I'm also a natural introvert so I realize this wouldn't work for everyone. I'm also very slow-paced compared to most people -- last year I was able to meet a few friends from CC that I have probably known for about 5-7 years, and it seemed to be the perfect timing. I usually had to travel for various reasons once or twice a year as it was, so now I try to see if there's anyone I can meet along the way (and vice versa, if they are going to be anywhere near me.)
But I always tell my family about it first, and if they have any hesitations, I try my best to listen. Many years ago, I was supposed to meet with someone (not from CC) but it didn't work out, and my Mom told me she'd had a feeling that I wasn't supposed to go, so if those around me aren't comfortable with my plans, I take that as God telling me no or to wait.
At the same time, I've had several friendships that lasted years and then abruptly end, and while it's always painful, it makes me think of an old saying: "When God closes a door, He opens a window."
If an online or real-life connection ends, I try my best to mentally reframe it as God telling me I need to direct my focus elsewhere.
I guess that can be one of the exciting things about life?
We never quite know where the journey (God) is taking us... Or who He might be leading us to.